Practical approach for one mJ femtosecond fiber laser

ABSTRACT

A fiber Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA) laser system includes a fiber mode-locking oscillator for generating a laser and stretching into a few hundreds ps-10 ns pulse by a fiber stretcher for projecting into an acoustic-optic (AO) functioning as a pulse picker for generated a modulated laser with a reduced repetition rate for projecting to a multiple stage amplifier. The multiple stage amplifier further includes a first high-energy amplifier implemented with a large mode area (LMA) fiber for amplifying the modulated laser up to a uJ level laser and a second amplifier implemented with a PCF based Yb doped fiber to further amplify the uJ level laser to a mJ level laser.

This Formal application claims a Priority Date of Feb. 2, 2006 benefit from a Provisional Patent Application 60/765,599 filed by the one common Inventor of this application. The disclosures made in 60/765,599 are hereby incorporated by reference in this patent application.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to apparatuses and methods for providing fiber laser system. More particularly, this invention relates a system configuration for providing a practical approach to provide a femtosecond fiber laser with one mJ level of energy.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Even though current technologies of fiber laser have made significant progress toward achieving a compact and reliable fiber laser system providing high quality output laser with ever increasing output energy, however those of ordinary skill in the art are still confronted with technical limitations and difficulties. Specifically, in a fiber laser system implemented with the Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA) for short pulse high power laser amplifier, the fiber laser systems are still limited by the technical difficulties that 1 mJ high energy femtosecond fiber laser requires multiple improvements in terms of fiber design, high power amplification, nonlinear effects mitigation, and stretching and compression operations. There is a first challenge of the nonlinear effects. When the peak power goes up to 100 kW, strong nonlinear effects such as self phase modulation (SPM) and stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) cause more serious problems in depleting signal power in the high power fiber laser, even though a large mode area (LMA) fiber be used to reduce SRS/SPM and increase saturation power. Then, there is another challenge of a third order dispersion (TOD). Due to a higher stretching ratio involves in the chirped pulse amplification, higher order dispersion such as TOD has significant impact on the pulse quality and the pulse faces a challenge to compress efficiently below 200 fs after amplification. Thus the third order dispersion (TOD) limits the scalability of the laser systems. Also, there is another challenge due to a lower extraction. The Yb-doped fibers are low in extracting more power out of fiber. Higher doping concentration has to be used for the fiber laser. Furthermore, there is a challenge of configuring the compression stage due to longer stretched pulses (a few hundreds ps-10 ns). All these challenges require new and improved fiber laser systems to reliably and practically generate the femtosecond laser at an energy level substantially near a one-mJ level.

Therefore, a need still exists in the art of fiber laser design and manufacture to provide a new and improved configuration and method to provide fiber laser to compensate the dispersion generated in the laser system due to the TOD effects such that the above-discussed difficulty may be resolved.

SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION

It is therefore an aspect of the present invention to provide a laser system wherein the laser transmission is provided to take advantage of the SPM to broaden the spectrum in the amplification stage such that the above-discussed difficulties of spectral narrowing effect during the pulse amplifications as that encountered in the prior art may be resolved.

Another aspect of this invention is to provide a laser system with an amplification stage that the spectrum is amplified without affecting the original pulse width instead of narrowing the pulse width due to limited gain bandwidth. Therefore, the gain of the amplifier has sufficient width to support the broadened spectrum by the SPM.

Another aspect of this invention is to provide a fiber laser system wherein the last amplifier is a photonic crystal fiber (PCF) amplifier and implementing a dispersion management stretching fiber and using a photonics bandgap fiber (PBF) for dechirping and compressing the pulse and reducing the third order dispersion (TOD).

Briefly, in a preferred embodiment, the present invention discloses a fiber Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA) laser system that includes a fiber mode-locking oscillator for generating a laser for projecting to an acoustic-optic (AO) functioning as a pulse picker for generated a modulated laser with a reduced repetition rate for projecting to a multiple stage amplifier. The multiple stage amplifier further includes a first high-energy amplifier implemented with a large mode area (LMA) fiber for amplifying the modulated laser up to a uJ level laser and a second amplifier implemented with a PCF based Yb doped fiber to further amplify the uJ level laser to a mJ level laser.

In an exemplary embodiment, this invention further discloses a method of generating a mJ (millie-Joule) level femtosecond (fs) fiber laser. The method includes a step of generating a laser from a fiber mode-locking oscillator for projecting to an acoustic-optic (AO) functioning as a pulse picker for generating a modulated laser with a reduced repetition rate for projecting to a multiple stage amplifier. The method further includes a step of amplifying the modulated laser up to a mJ level laser by a first high-energy amplifier implemented with a large mode area (LMA) fiber and further amplifying the mJ level laser to an output power over 10 W and an energy over 2 mJ with femtosecond pulses through a second amplifier implemented with a PCF based Yb doped fiber. In an exemplary embodiment, the step of generating a laser from a fiber mode-locking oscillator further comprising a step of generating the laser from a mode locked femtosecond fiber laser operating at 1060 nm spectral region and with a pulse width of 100 fs. In another exemplary embodiment, the step of reducing a repletion rate of a modulated laser is a step of reducing a repetition rate of the modulated laser from 10's MHz to 10's kHz. In another exemplary embodiment, the step of projecting the modulate laser into the multiple-stage amplifier further comprising step of projecting the modulated laser to a low energy fiber amplifier at a μJ level. In another exemplary embodiment, the method further includes a step of stretching a pulse width of the laser through a stretching stage implemented with a fiber based dispersion management stretcher and dechirping said laser pulses and reducing a third order dispersion (TOD) through a compressor implemented with a photonics bandgap fiber (PBF) or a pair of gratings.

These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after having read the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment, which is illustrated in the various drawing figures.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a functional block diagram for showing a fiber laser system implemented with a multiple amplifiers with last amplifier using a PCF amplifier and implementing a dispersion management stretching fiber and using a PBF or a grating pair for dechirping and compressing the pulse and reducing the third order dispersion (TOD).

FIG. 1A is a side cross sectional view of a DC PCF fiber structure with active LMA or multi mode core.

FIG. 2 shows a diagram of fiber dispersion and index profile of the fiber of this invention to reduce the TOD.

FIG. 3 is a diagram for showing the evolution of the pulse spectrum in Yb fiber at 1060 spectral band

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Referring to FIG. 1 for a schematic diagram of an mJ (millie-Joule) level femtosecond (fs) fiber laser system 100 of this invention. The laser system 100 includes a laser seed 105 for generating a seed laser. The seed laser 105 is a mode locked femtosecond fiber laser operating at 1060 nm spectral region and with a compressable pulse width of 100 fs and stretching into a few hundreds ps-10 ns pulse by a fiber stretcher (not shown) and projecting into an acoustic-optic (AO) modulator 110. The AO modulator 110 functions as a pulse picker for reducing the repetition rate from 40 MHz to 10's kHz to 100's kHz. The laser modulated by the AO modulator 110 is then projected to one low energy fiber amplifier 120 at a μJ level and a high energy fiber amplifier 130 at an energy of mJ level. Optionally, there may be two high-energy amplifiers. The higher energy amplifier 130 delivers an output power over 1 W and energy over 200 μJ femtosecond pulses. The amplified laser is then transmitted to last energy amplifier 140 to generate amplified pulse with energy over 1 mJ and average power over 10 W that is further projected to compressor stage that is not specifically shown. The last amplifier 140 is a photonic crystal fiber (PCF) amplifier.

Amplification of the pulses can be achieved by using a short piece of high concentration double cladding Yd-doped phtonics crystal fiber (PCF) with large mode area (LMA or multi mode) as shown in FIG. 1A The LMA or multimode structure of core of the DCYDF combined with short length help reduce the nonlinear effects such as SPM and SRS. When the core diameter is 60 μm, a stretched pulse with hundreds of ps pulse width can usually be amplified to mJ level without any self focusing issue (self focusing is a fundamental limit for fiber laser in high peak power operation). Further more, When the core diameter can be increased to 200 μm, a stretched pulse with tens of ns pulse width can usually be amplified to tens of mJ without any self focusing issue (self focusing is a fundamental limit for fiber laser in high peak power operation).

The stretching stage is implemented with a fiber based dispersion management stretcher which will be described in details later. The compression is implemented with a photonics bandgap fiber (PBF) for dechirping the pulse and reducing the third order dispersion (TOD) or a pair of gratings as described in patent application 60/696,372. The details of the stretching stage and the compression fiber have also been disclosed in Patent Applications 60/696,372, 60/696,275, 60/713,653 and are hereby incorporated by reference in this patent application. By using PBF in the compression stage 160, a truly all fiber solution is provided for the high-energy fiber laser without any discrete free space components.

For the stretcher, a special design is implemented that has a flat dispersion over the range of 1020-1090 nm, similar to that dispersion flattened fiber used in 1550 nm spectral band by using a depressed cladding structure. FIG. 2 shows an example of the index profile for this type of fiber and possible flattened dispersion at 1060 spectral band. Basically, the dispersion in the fiber is controlled by both material dispersion and waveguide dispersion. At the 1020-1090 nm spectral region, material dispersion shows a positive dispersion slope. With traditional fiber design such as that for SM 28, the dispersion slope always show a positive number around 0.3 ps/nm̂2.km. However, by manipulating the fiber waveguide structure (e.g. depressed cladding structure as shown in FIG. 2), the waveguide dispersion can be introduced in modification of the material dispersion to obtain the expected dispersion and dispersion slope. The depressed cladding structure can be technically achieved by varying the doping when making the fiber platform layer by layer. By doping Ge, the refractive index can be raised and by doping fluoride, the refractive index can be reduced.

The high-power amplifier stage is implemented with two high power amplifiers 120 and 130, the first amplifier 120 is implemented with a large mode area (LMA) fiber to amplify the stretched pulse (a few hundreds ps-10 ns) to 100 uJ level. The second amplifier 130 is implemented with a PCF based Yb doped fiber, also referenced to as an air cladding fiber to further amplify the pulses to over 2 mj.

The last stage amplifier 140 is designed to have certain level of SPM to broadening the spectrum wider than the original input and amplify it through the amplifier stage by taking advantage of the natural wide and flat gain bandwidth of Yb fiber operating around 1060 band. FIG. 3 illustrates the working principal. The input pulse with certain bandwidth of spectrum will get amplified in the Yb doped fiber amplifier and the spectrum will get broadened due to SPM. The broadened spectrum located within the gain spectrum of the Yb fiber amplifier so it can continue to be amplified and broadened further. This will significantly enable the reduction reduce of the length of compression stage using bulk gratings or the length of PBF (for all fiber solution since the compression length is inversely proportional to the pulse bandwidth.

Although the present invention has been described in terms of the presently preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that such disclosure is not to be interpreted as limiting. Various alternations and modifications will no doubt become apparent to those skilled in the art after reading the above disclosure. Accordingly, it is intended that the appended claims be interpreted as covering all alternations and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. 

1. A fiber Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA) laser system comprising: a fiber mode-locking oscillator for generating a laser and stretching into a few hundreds ps-10 ns pulse by a fiber stretcher for projecting into an acoustic-optic (AO) functioning as a pulse picker for generated a modulated laser with a reduced repetition rate for projecting to a multiple stage amplifier wherein said multiple stage amplifier further includes a first high-energy amplifier implemented with a large mode area (LMA) fiber for amplifying said modulated laser up to a hundred μJ level laser and a second amplifier implemented with a PCF based Yb doped fiber to further amplify said tens or hundred μJ level laser to an output power over 10 W and an energy over 2 mJ with compressable femtosecond pulses.
 2. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 1 wherein: said fiber mode-locking oscillator is a mode locked femtosecond fiber laser operating at 1060 nm spectral region and with a compressible pulse width smaller than 200 fs.
 3. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 1 wherein: said acoustic-optic (AO) modulator functions as a pulse picker for reducing a repetition rate of said modulated laser from (20-100) MHz to (10-500) kHz.
 4. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 1 wherein: said multiple-stage amplifier further comprising a low energy fiber amplifier for projecting said modulated laser into said first high-energy amplifier at a μJ level.
 5. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 1 further comprising: a PCF based Yb doped fiber to further amplify said tens or hundred μJ level laser to an output power over 10 W and an energy over 2 mJ with compressible femtosecond pulses.
 6. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 1 further comprising: a stretching stage implemented with a fiber based dispersion management stretcher for stretching a pulse width of said laser and a compressor implemented with a photonics bandgap fiber (PBF) for dechirping said laser pulses and reducing a third order dispersion (TOD).
 7. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 6 wherein: said stretching stage implemented with said fiber based dispersion management stretcher having a flat dispersion or negative dispersion slope dispersion over a range of 1020 to 1090 nm by using a depressed cladding structure in reducing/compensating the TOD.
 8. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 1 wherein: said multiple-stage amplifier further comprising a last stage amplifier with a level of SPM to broadening a spectrum wider than an original input for amplification by taking advantage of a wide and flat gain bandwidth of a Yb fiber operating around an 1060 spectral band.
 9. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 6 wherein: said stretching stage implemented with said fiber based dispersion management stretcher for using a SPM effect to broaden a spectrum of said laser after amplification whereby a broadened spectrum is not limited by a gain spectrum of said multiple state amplifier.
 10. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 1 further comprising: a compressor implemented with a prism grating pair for reducing a TOD.
 11. A fiber Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA) laser system comprising: a fiber mode-locking oscillator for generating a laser and stretching into a few hundreds ps-10 ns pulse by a fiber stretcher and projecting into an for projecting to an acoustic-optic (AO) functioning as a pulse picker for generated a modulated laser with a reduced repetition rate for projecting to a multiple stage amplifier wherein said multiple stage amplifier further includes a first high-energy amplifier implemented with a large mode area (LMA) fiber for amplifying said modulated laser up to a hundred μJ level laser and a second amplifier implemented with a PCF based Yb doped fiber to further amplify said tens or hundred μJ level laser to an output power over 10 W and an energy over 2 mJ with compressable femtosecond pulses. said fiber mode-locking oscillator is a mode locked femtosecond fiber laser operating at 1060 nm spectral region and with a pulse width of 100 fs; said acoustic-optic (AO) modulator functions as a pulse picker for reducing a repetition rate of said modulated laser from (20-100) MHz to (10-500) kHz. said multiple-stage amplifier further comprising a low energy fiber amplifier for projecting said modulated laser into said first high-energy amplifier at a μJ level; a stretching stage implemented with a fiber based dispersion management stretcher having a flat dispersion over a range of 1020 to 1090 nm by using a depressed cladding structure for stretching a pulse width of said laser and a compressor implemented with a photonics bandgap fiber (PBF) or a grating pair for dechirping said laser pulses and reducing a third order dispersion (TOD).
 12. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 11 wherein: said multiple-stage amplifier further comprising a last stage amplifier with a level of SPM to broadening a spectrum wider than an original input for amplification by taking advantage of a wide and flat gain bandwidth of a Yb fiber operating around an 1060 spectral band.
 13. The fiber CPA laser system of claim 11 wherein: said stretching stage implemented with said fiber based dispersion management stretcher for using a SPM effect to broaden a spectrum of said laser after amplification whereby a broadened spectrum is not limited by a gain spectrum of said multiple state amplifier.
 14. A method of generating a mJ (millie-Joule) level femtosecond (fs) fiber laser comprising: generating a laser from a fiber mode-locking oscillator for projecting to an acoustic-optic (AO) functioning as a pulse picker for generating a modulated laser with a reduced repetition rate for projecting to a multiple stage amplifier; and amplifying said modulated laser up to a mJ level laser by a first high-energy amplifier implemented with a large mode area (LMA) fiber and further amplifying said a hundred μJ level laser to an output power over 10 W and an energy over 2 mJ with femtosecond pulses through a second amplifier implemented with a PCF based Yb doped fiber.
 15. The method of claim 14 wherein: said step of generating a laser from a fiber mode-locking oscillator further comprising a step of generating said laser from a mode locked femtosecond fiber laser operating at 1060 nm spectral region and with a pulse width <200 fs.
 16. The method of claim 14 wherein: said step of reducing a repletion rate of a modulated laser is a step of reducing a repetition rate of said modulated laser from 20-100 MHz to 10-500 kHz.
 17. The method of claim 14 wherein: said step of projecting said modulate laser into said multiple-stage amplifier further comprising step of projecting said modulated laser to a low energy fiber amplifier at a μJ level.
 18. The method of claim 14 further comprising: stretching a pulse width of said laser through a stretching stage implemented with a fiber based dispersion management stretcher and dechirping said laser pulses and reducing a third order dispersion (TOD) through a compressor implemented with a photonics bandgap fiber (PBF) or a grating pair.
 19. The method of claim 18 wherein: said step of stretching a pulse width of said laser through a stretching stage further comprising a step of stretching said pulse width of said laser having a flat dispersion over a range of 1020 to 1090 nm by using a depressed cladding structure in said stretching stage.
 20. The method of claim 14 wherein: said step of amplifying said laser through said multiple stage amplifier is a step of amplifying said laser with a last stage amplifier with a level of SPM to broadening a spectrum wider than an original input for amplification by taking advantage of a wide and flat gain bandwidth of a Yb fiber operating around an 1060 band.
 21. The method of claim 18 wherein: said step of stretching said laser through said stretching stage further comprising a step of stretching said laser with said fiber based dispersion management stretcher by using a SPM effect to broaden a spectrum of said laser after amplification whereby a broadened spectrum is not limited by a gain spectrum of said multiple state amplifier. 